| Literature DB >> 35005368 |
Melanie Noel1, Christine T Chambers2,3,4, Jennifer A Parker3, Kate Aubrey2,3, Perri R Tutelman2,3, Barbara Morrongiello5, Chris Moore2, Patrick J McGrath6,7, Natalie L Yanchar8, Carl L Von Baeyer9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Everyday pain experiences (minor bumps/scrapes) are common in early childhood and create frequent opportunities for socialization of pain behaviors. Nevertheless, everyday pain during the formative toddler period has been largely overlooked. AIMS: The aim of the current study was to describe the frequency and nature of toddlers' everyday pain experiences, child and parent responses, and the relationship between child characteristics (age, sex, temperament) and responses.Entities:
Keywords: acute pain; distress; everyday pain; parents; toddlers
Year: 2018 PMID: 35005368 PMCID: PMC8730579 DOI: 10.1080/24740527.2018.1442677
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can J Pain ISSN: 2474-0527
Interrater agreement and descriptive statistics for the DEPS-R (n = 57).
| DEPS-R item (range) | % Agreement | M (SD) |
| Behavioral context | ||
| Activity level (1–5)a | 45 | — |
| Tone (1–5)a | 55 | — |
| Description of incident | ||
| Body locationa (three options; upper, lower, both) | 34 | n/a |
| Hurt caused by (four options) | 80 | n/a |
| Severity of hurt (0–4)a | 59 | — |
| Child’s response | ||
| Child distress post incident (0–5)a | 63 | — |
| Child facial distress post incident (0–5) | 70 | 0.91 (1.35) |
| Intensity of anger (0–5) | 89 | 0.18 (0.63) |
| Protective behaviors (three options) | 93 | n/a |
| Social response (three options) | 82 | n/a |
| Child distress 1 min post incident (0–5) | 100 | 0.05 (0.38) |
| Child facial distress 1 min post incident (0–5) | 98 | 0.07 (0.53) |
aVariable not included in analyses due to low reliability (<70%).
DEPS-R = Dalhousie Everyday Pain Scale–Revised.
Frequency of parental responses to first everyday pain incident.a
| Parental response | No. (%) of responses |
| Does not notice incident | 6 (14.3) |
| Verbal responses: | |
| Reassures child that (s)he will be OK | 2 (4.7) |
| Apologizes to child | 0 (0) |
| Sympathizes with child | 0 (0) |
| Encourages child to to something else | 0 (0) |
| Talks about something else | 1 (2.4) |
| Tells child to stop crying | 0 (0) |
| Tells child to be more careful | 1 (2.4) |
| Checks in with child (e.g., “are you OK?”) | 9 (21.4) |
| Gets upsets with, scolds, or threatens child | 0 (0) |
| Other (e.g., says “oops”/“whoops”/“oh-oh”) | 9 (21.4) |
| Nonverbal responses: | |
| Witnessed incident but shows no reaction | 6 (14.3) |
| Rubs hurt area | 2 (4.8) |
| Hugs/kisses the child | 5 (11.9) |
| Kisses the “booboo” better | 1 (2.4) |
| Stays closer to child | 8 (19.0) |
| Distracts child with a toy or object | 0 (0) |
| Distracts child by pointing to something | 0 (0) |
| Takes child out of play setting | 7 (16.7) |
| Other/picks up childb | 14 (33.3) |
aResponse types were observed to occur at least once during entire observational period.
bThis variable was created post hoc and thus reliability could not be calculated.